Copycat brands try to entice consumers by imitating the trade-dress of leading brands. Recent research suggests that preferences for copycat brands relative to more differentiated brands are generally lower. That is, consumers tend to dislike such “imitation” brands, because of psychological reactance. Three experiments provide evidence in support of the counter hypothesis that preferences for copycats, rather than being generally negative, critically depend on consumers’ uncertainty. When uncertainty about product quality is low, people dislike copycat brands, but this preference reverses when uncertainty is high – despite awareness of the imitation tactics being used. We speculate that this preference reversal occurs because the familiar ...
This research investigates how individual and company-controlled variables affect attitudes toward o...
This paper examines the influence of consumers’ need for uniqueness on attitudes towards counterfeit...
A copycat strategy uses visual similarity to an established leader as a persuasion tool. Although no...
Copycat brands try to entice consumers by imitating the trade-dress of leading brands. Recent resear...
Copycat brands try to gain acceptance from consumers by imitating the trade dress of a leading, incu...
The goal of this paper was to explore the type of attitudes with regards to the ABC-model consumer h...
Copycat brands imitate the trade dress of other brands, such as their brand name, logo, and packagin...
Copycat brands imitate the trade dress of other brands, such as their brand name, logo, and packagin...
This research investigates how consumers evaluate original goods, counterfeits and imitations in the...
Copycat brands imitate the trade dress of a leader brand to free ride on the latter's equity. Copyca...
Consumer product companies and retailers often imitate the appearance (or “trade-dress”) of a leader...
Brand imitation is viewed as an infringement of the imitated original brand. (Zaichkowsky, 1995). Al...
Copycats imitate features of leading brands to free ride on their equity. The prevailing belief is t...
This paper investigates situations where a sizeable sub-set of consumers prefer an inferior (dominat...
<div><p>Copycat brands mimic brand leaders to free ride on the latter's equity. However, little is k...
This research investigates how individual and company-controlled variables affect attitudes toward o...
This paper examines the influence of consumers’ need for uniqueness on attitudes towards counterfeit...
A copycat strategy uses visual similarity to an established leader as a persuasion tool. Although no...
Copycat brands try to entice consumers by imitating the trade-dress of leading brands. Recent resear...
Copycat brands try to gain acceptance from consumers by imitating the trade dress of a leading, incu...
The goal of this paper was to explore the type of attitudes with regards to the ABC-model consumer h...
Copycat brands imitate the trade dress of other brands, such as their brand name, logo, and packagin...
Copycat brands imitate the trade dress of other brands, such as their brand name, logo, and packagin...
This research investigates how consumers evaluate original goods, counterfeits and imitations in the...
Copycat brands imitate the trade dress of a leader brand to free ride on the latter's equity. Copyca...
Consumer product companies and retailers often imitate the appearance (or “trade-dress”) of a leader...
Brand imitation is viewed as an infringement of the imitated original brand. (Zaichkowsky, 1995). Al...
Copycats imitate features of leading brands to free ride on their equity. The prevailing belief is t...
This paper investigates situations where a sizeable sub-set of consumers prefer an inferior (dominat...
<div><p>Copycat brands mimic brand leaders to free ride on the latter's equity. However, little is k...
This research investigates how individual and company-controlled variables affect attitudes toward o...
This paper examines the influence of consumers’ need for uniqueness on attitudes towards counterfeit...
A copycat strategy uses visual similarity to an established leader as a persuasion tool. Although no...